Frontier

The Frontier was a vast region in the northeastern United States the area west of/in the present-day states of New Hampshire, New York, Massachusetts, New Jersey, and Pennsylvania. The Frontier was inhabited by the Indians, who fought and ambushed several colonists in the area, ever since the British arrival in 1622.

History
The Frontier was originally a quiet place where Native American tribes settled, and hunted game, built small villages, and learned the ways of nature. The game were not as ferociously hunted by the Indians as the whites did, and the environment was kept well-treated. However, with the expansion of the British from 1761 to 1775, and from then on, the Patriots, the frontier was disturbed, and was split up into hunting regions for poachers. In 1761, the Burning of Kanatahseton in the French and Indian War started the disturbance, while the wars continued until the frontier was settled at the end of the War of 1812 in 1815.

The Indians resisted the whites, fighting them hard and well by ambushing small patrols of Militia and British troops, as well as attacking some hunters in the wilderness that was known so well by the Mohawk and other tribes. The lands were eventually logged and cleansed of animals by the whites, who destroyed the forests, as well as animals' homes and the Indian tribes' camps.

Regions
The area was divided into several hunting regions:
 * Scratch Plains
 * Lexington
 * Concord
 * Great Piece Hills
 * John's Town
 * Kanatahseton
 * Valley Forge